Scanning film with a camera

spain

A
spain

  • 1
  • 0
  • 36
Humming Around!

D
Humming Around!

  • 4
  • 0
  • 58
Pride

A
Pride

  • 2
  • 1
  • 127
Paris

A
Paris

  • 5
  • 1
  • 201

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
198,420
Messages
2,774,697
Members
99,611
Latest member
Toonces
Recent bookmarks
0

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
6,718
Format
35mm
I do this but it's far more complex and there's a large learning curve. Once you get it down the results can be really really good. Once thing though, that lomo holder is really really bad. Waste of money.
 

Luckless

Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2016
Messages
1,362
Location
Canada
Format
Multi Format
Haven't read their article in full detail yet, but man that tripod setup looks like an alignment nightmare...

Also kind of worried that they had a section that appeared to be suggesting that film flatness and position was more about avoiding depth of field issues, rather than about ensuring your copying isn't introducing any alignment skewing that might need correcting in post.

[Wonder if I'll ever get around to building a rapid scanner out of my old DSLR, some rail mount gear, and the guts of a 3d printer or something... Really want to be able to load sheets or film strips into holders that get fed through a magazine, and have the whole scanning system automated to the point of being hands off. That or I could spend more time playing with darkroom stuff. But this is coming from the guy with like a six month development backlog on a few dozen rolls of film at this point. How much do art interns cost?]
 

radiant

Member
Joined
Aug 18, 2019
Messages
2,135
Location
Europe
Format
Hybrid
[Wonder if I'll ever get around to building a rapid scanner out of my old DSLR, some rail mount gear, and the guts of a 3d printer or something... Really want to be able to load sheets or film strips into holders that get fed through a magazine, and have the whole scanning system automated to the point of being hands off. That or I could spend more time playing with darkroom stuff. But this is coming from the guy with like a six month development backlog on a few dozen rolls of film at this point. How much do art interns cost?]

Same here. I would like to do a "contact" scan for the whole film when it has dried - before cutting. Maybe like pull the film through some track and snap the frames in few minutes with DSLR. Just to get a contact-sheet-style preview images to select the ones to print.
 

osella

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 1, 2013
Messages
115
Location
Vermont
Format
8x10 Format
I thought about going down this avenue for a while. It sounded good at first, but when I really got down into the details(alignment, problems with stitching etc.) I ended up buying a Nikon 9000. Granted an old scanner could potentially have issues, but I would rather spend my time taking pictures and printing than I would messing around trying to get the results I expect.
 

wahiba

Member
Joined
Mar 19, 2004
Messages
190
Location
Keighley, UK
Format
Analog
Same here. I would like to do a "contact" scan for the whole film when it has dried - before cutting. Maybe like pull the film through some track and snap the frames in few minutes with DSLR. Just to get a contact-sheet-style preview images to select the ones to print.

My Lomo frame for 120 film came today. I do not know about the 35mm holder but the 120 works well. As a quick trial I placed it over an Led mains ceiling light that I have made into a basic light box. I thought it might be too bright but as the frame with the negatives fitted nicely on the lamp I gave it a try using an older digital camera hand held both colour and black and white. Well the results were surprisingly good.

Light by the way was meant to fit on ceiling but by mistake bought one requiring a big hole cutting. I just made a box for it. Light actually has three colour temp options activated switching off and on. I reckon good results with a fixed set up.

I reckon for quick test snaps a hand held camera is more than adequate though. Certainly the results are the same as from those cheap and cheerful 'scanners' one feeds film through but actually is just a basic camera system.
 

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
6,718
Format
35mm
Same here. I would like to do a "contact" scan for the whole film when it has dried - before cutting. Maybe like pull the film through some track and snap the frames in few minutes with DSLR. Just to get a contact-sheet-style preview images to select the ones to print.

Been looking for something like this for a while. Aligning the frames is the most time consuming part.
 

AndyH

Member
Joined
Aug 16, 2004
Messages
451
Location
New England
Format
Medium Format
Alignment of the tripod, if it's done right, is an extensive process. And once you've done it, you still have to be careful not to jiggle or move either part of the setup. Once you're set up, you can scan many at a time quite easily, but I think I'll go for the Canon V550 instead. Setup should be a breeze, and you can do other things while the negatives are scanning. The lomo negative holder is flimsy and probably won't last very long. I'd be dubious about its initial alignment as well as keeping it from warping in the future.

Andy
 

rst

Member
Joined
Jul 30, 2004
Messages
1,154
Location
Germany
Format
Pinhole
When I first tried to digitally photo-scan my negatives I also started with a tripod setup and it was a pain. I now solved it with a setup I built myself out of a piece of wood, a quick load plate and ... Legos. I use a Nikkor macro lens which does not have inner focusing. To get the negative in focus I set the lens to infinity and place the Lego-rig right in front of it so that the negative plane and sensor plane are aligned. Then - while focusing - the lens pushes the Lego-rig ahead and this keeps the negative and sensor plane aligned. I built the Lego setup so that once I can see the grain I do have the full negative in the frame. The negative carrier is built out of two pieces of cardboard with a window in it I can open it a bit or squeeze the neg between the two pieces of cardboard which flattens the negative.

It all sounds more complicated than it really is. But with this setup I have the negative easily aligned and I am able to scan a roll of 36 exposures in less than 5 minutes. Setup time is less than a minute.

With this setup and a 24MP camera, what I get is photo-scanned images of around 20MP. I could change the setup slightly to get a bit more, but that would slow down the scanning and the 20MP are enough for my purposes anyway.
 

etn

Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2015
Messages
1,113
Location
Munich, Germany
Format
Medium Format
Haven't read their article in full detail yet, but man that tripod setup looks like an alignment nightmare...
Indeed. A copy stand where you can easily adjust height is much better. (Needs extra gear at extra cost, though... pretty much everyone has a tripod, not a copy stand.) Also, the light box around the film should be masked, so as not to cause stray light into the lens. I have seen stray light causing massive image degradation with the scans I did. This is easy to do with a piece of dark cardboard or cloth.
 
Last edited:

etn

Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2015
Messages
1,113
Location
Munich, Germany
Format
Medium Format
When I first tried to digitally photo-scan my negatives I also started with a tripod setup and it was a pain. I now solved it with a setup I built myself out of a piece of wood, a quick load plate and ... Legos.
Wow, that's cool! I imagine that doing an automatic film advance for batch scanning of a full roll is probably also doable with Legos.
 

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
52,607
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
When I first tried to digitally photo-scan my negatives I also started with a tripod setup and it was a pain. I now solved it with a setup I built myself out of a piece of wood, a quick load plate and ... Legos. I use a Nikkor macro lens which does not have inner focusing. To get the negative in focus I set the lens to infinity and place the Lego-rig right in front of it so that the negative plane and sensor plane are aligned. Then - while focusing - the lens pushes the Lego-rig ahead and this keeps the negative and sensor plane aligned. I built the Lego setup so that once I can see the grain I do have the full negative in the frame. The negative carrier is built out of two pieces of cardboard with a window in it I can open it a bit or squeeze the neg between the two pieces of cardboard which flattens the negative.

It all sounds more complicated than it really is. But with this setup I have the negative easily aligned and I am able to scan a roll of 36 exposures in less than 5 minutes. Setup time is less than a minute.

With this setup and a 24MP camera, what I get is photo-scanned images of around 20MP. I could change the setup slightly to get a bit more, but that would slow down the scanning and the 20MP are enough for my purposes anyway.
Ruediger:
Welcome back - you have been missed these last three years.
Lego is a great idea!
 

rst

Member
Joined
Jul 30, 2004
Messages
1,154
Location
Germany
Format
Pinhole
Ruediger:
Welcome back - you have been missed these last three years.
Lego is a great idea!
Thanks Matt! Yes, it is good to be back. Although I no longer have a darkroom which keeps me away from the cool exchange projects. But I am back in using film (besides digital).

With the "Lego-Scanner" setup it is as it was with my darkroom ... there is always a way to work-around some missing gear and in the end I found a way that works for me.

Cheers
Ruediger
 

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
6,718
Format
35mm
I use a copystand and a lightpad that's masked off with tape. I shoot the film with an 18mp camera and a 100mm macro lens. It's good enough for me to print 8x12 with zero issue. I'm confident I could go far larger. Each roll is about an hour of work, scanning and post.
 

PhilBurton

Subscriber
Joined
Oct 20, 2018
Messages
467
Location
Western USA
Format
35mm
When I first tried to digitally photo-scan my negatives I also started with a tripod setup and it was a pain. I now solved it with a setup I built myself out of a piece of wood, a quick load plate and ... Legos. I use a Nikkor macro lens which does not have inner focusing. To get the negative in focus I set the lens to infinity and place the Lego-rig right in front of it so that the negative plane and sensor plane are aligned. Then - while focusing - the lens pushes the Lego-rig ahead and this keeps the negative and sensor plane aligned. I built the Lego setup so that once I can see the grain I do have the full negative in the frame. The negative carrier is built out of two pieces of cardboard with a window in it I can open it a bit or squeeze the neg between the two pieces of cardboard which flattens the negative.

It all sounds more complicated than it really is. But with this setup I have the negative easily aligned and I am able to scan a roll of 36 exposures in less than 5 minutes. Setup time is less than a minute.

With this setup and a 24MP camera, what I get is photo-scanned images of around 20MP. I could change the setup slightly to get a bit more, but that would slow down the scanning and the 20MP are enough for my purposes anyway.
Your setup sounds interesting and Lego blocks are relatively inexpensive. Can you post some photos?
 

Dusty Negative

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 25, 2019
Messages
585
Location
Virginia
Format
Medium Format
I use my Fujifilm X-T2 and an old Canon FD macro 100mm. It works just fine, particularly with 120 film frames which fit about 80-85% of the frame (eyeball measurement). It's not particularly painful if you're doing the occasional roll of 120, but I cannot honestly say I've never thought about buying an Epson V850 to save me the hassle of clearing off the dining room table.
 

rst

Member
Joined
Jul 30, 2004
Messages
1,154
Location
Germany
Format
Pinhole
Your setup sounds interesting and Lego blocks are relatively inexpensive. Can you post some photos?
Sure, I will show something over the weekend. But be warned it is not the High Art of Lego :wink:

Cheers
Rüdiger
 

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
6,718
Format
35mm
I use my Fujifilm X-T2 and an old Canon FD macro 100mm. It works just fine, particularly with 120 film frames which fit about 80-85% of the frame (eyeball measurement). It's not particularly painful if you're doing the occasional roll of 120, but I cannot honestly say I've never thought about buying an Epson V850 to save me the hassle of clearing off the dining room table.

I take two photos of 120 and stitch together.
 

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
6,718
Format
35mm
I suppose as long as your negs are completely flat this isn't too complicated?

Snap one photo of half, move it down and snap the other. I use a negative carrier from my enlarger. I let Photoshop do the work and it tends to do a great job. I get massive resolution off of it.

jomY6hh.jpg
 

Dusty Negative

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 25, 2019
Messages
585
Location
Virginia
Format
Medium Format
Nice. Will have to try that soon. I'll post any successes...but will be oddly quiet should things not go to plan.....
 

Grim Tuesday

Member
Joined
Oct 1, 2018
Messages
737
Location
Philadelphia
Format
Medium Format
Also kind of worried that they had a section that appeared to be suggesting that film flatness and position was more about avoiding depth of field issues, rather than about ensuring your copying isn't introducing any alignment skewing that might need correcting in post.

What concerns you about this? The DoF issues are very significant at the magnifications we are "scanning" at.

By the way, I use my enlarger stand to DSLR scan, it is a Durst 606 and the condensor head comes off and can be replaced with a camera. It fixes alignment issues in most dimensions. Since this is a film forum, this enlarger-based setup could be useful to many people. Personally, I use a D5500 with nikkor 55 2.8. I tested the 55 3.5 as well and it has noticeable softer corners at high magnifications. I experimented a lot with negative carriers (including straight on top of glass) and found that to not much surprise, a negative carrier from a Beseler enlarger I happened to have lying around is best for 6x6. I use a negative mask that came with my Durst straight on glass for the 35mm and have had surprisingly few newton ring problems.

I have been very satisfied with the results, almost to the point where I'm willing to sell my V700. An example: https://www.flickr.com/photos/132764966@N03/48666330146/in/dateposted-public/
 
Last edited:

GLS

Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2018
Messages
1,726
Location
England
Format
Multi Format
Also, the light box around the film should be masked, so as not to cause stray light into the lens. I have seen stray light causing massive image degradation with the scans I did

I have seen many people recommend this, but I have never seen issues of flare and I do not mask out the lightbox. To hold the film I use a negative carrier which has roughly 1.5 inches of black frame all around the aperture, and I use a lens hood on the macro, but that's it.
 

etn

Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2015
Messages
1,113
Location
Munich, Germany
Format
Medium Format
I have seen many people recommend this, but I have never seen issues of flare and I do not mask out the lightbox. To hold the film I use a negative carrier which has roughly 1.5 inches of black frame all around the aperture, and I use a lens hood on the macro, but that's it.
during my earlier experimentations, I had film holders which did not mask much around the picture. I experimented with various devices, cardboard, empty slide mounts (to hold the film flat), Lomography's Digitaliza, etc with various results. All light entering the lens around the image created flare. On top of that, handling was poor. I ended up recycling an enlarger's neg holder which has enough black frame around the image, and the issue is gone. I think that as long as no bright light enters the lens around your picture area, there won't be any problem.
I also switch off the room's lights so as to avoid reflections on the film.

I now manage to scan an entire roll in 5-15 minutes - the longest part being getting the neg out of the sleeves and back into them again.
Thanks for the comment on lens hood, I should use that too :smile: (I just need to find one... don't have one yet)
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom